|
Tour Hill of Tarvit
An Edwardian mansion house with 500 acres of garden, forest and
farm land in E Fife, situated near the A916, 2½ miles (4 km) south
of Cupar.
Built in 1696 and attributed to Sir William Bruce, the house at
Hill of Tarvit was originally called Wemyss Hall. In 1904 it was
bought by Mr F.B. Sharp and rebuilt to a design by Sir Robert
Lorimer to form a suitable setting for his collection of French,
Chippendale and vernacular furniture, Dutch paintings, Flemish
tapestries and Chinese porcelain. In 1949 the property was bequeathed
to the National Trust for Scotland by Miss E.C. Sharp.
Tour
Cupar
CUPAR
flourished as the County Town of Fife up to 1975, when local government
reorganisation took place and today it has local offices as part
of Fife County. The town of Cupar is one of the oldest burghs
in Scotland and although the earliest known charter dates back
to 1382, it was certainly a prominent burgh long before then.
Cupar has always benefited from its central location in the Howe
of Fife as the converging roads from Falkland, St.Andrews, Dundee
and Edinburgh made Cupar the natural place for the Thanes of Fife
to build their castles over one thousand years ago. Records date
back to 1239 confirming Cupar as the Seat of Justice and the early
Sheriff Courts were held on the Moat Hill.This connection with
the law give rise to the old proverb 'He that will to Cupar
maun to Cupar'. The old Parish Church in the Kirkgate was
originally built in 1415 and only the tower and spire retained
when it was rebuilt in 1785. In the Parish grave yard lie the
heads of two Covenenters and a hand of the infamous Hackston of
Rathillet. In 1679 when the Archbishop James Sharp was dragged
from his coach on Magus Muir and murdered by the Covenanters,
Hackston of Rathillet sat impassively on his horse watching the
gory proceedings. For his involvement in this murder he was cruelly
executed in Edinburgh in 1680.
In Cupar any hangings would normally take place at the Fluthers,
and the last public hanging was held on the 5th July 1852. Religious
strife has often played a major role in Scottish history and at
the time of the Reformation two opposing armies faced each other
on Cupar Muir. The army of the Lords of the Congregation who supported
John Knox and the Reformers gathered to challenge the Queen Regent's
army who were intending to march on to St.Andrews. The challenge
proved effective and a treaty was signed on the nearby Hill of
Tarvit. The Mercat Cross once stood on this hill but it was returned
to its proper place outside the Town Hall to mark Queen Victoria's
Diamond Jubilee Celebrations in 1897.
To the north of Cupar a 95ft high column known as the Mount, commemorates
Sir John Hope of Rankeilour, the 4th Earl of Hopetoun. The Mount
was also the birthplace of the famous David Lyndsay who served
at the courts of James IV and James V. He is best known for his
satirical play 'The Three Estates' which was first acted
in Cupar in June 1535. In the build up to the Reformation the
play was well received as it poked ridicule at the role of the
Church. Cupar was naturally the centre for many industries which
benfited in the late 1880s from the rail link between Dundee and
Edinburgh.
In 1926 Scotland's only sugar beet factory was built outside
Cupar. It closed down in the 1970s and the agricultural market
near the station closed in early 1994 thus ending Cupar's
role as the main market town in Fife stretching back at least
seven hundred years. Even though the importance of Cupar has diminished
in recent years the town still offers many excellent leisure facilities
including, golf, rugby, cricket, football, swimming, tennis,and
bowls for locals and visitors. Scotstarvit Tower stands high high
above the Howe of Fife commanding an excellent view to the Lomond
Hills. This 16th century keep was bought in 1611 by Sir John Scott
of Scotstarvit who was acknowledged as a great expert in cartography.
In 1654 he published the first maps of all the counties and islands
of Scotland. The tower was abandoned in 1696 and was eventually
owned by the Wemyss family who owned Wemyss Hall- now named the
Hill of Tarvit Mansion House. The original 17th century Wemyss
Hall was designed by architect Sir William Bruc. In 1906 the wealthy
Dundee jute owner Frederick Bower Sharp commissioned archiect
Sir Robert Lorimer to redesign the house for his private collection
of European paintings, Flemish tapestries, Chinese porcelains
and French and Regency furniture. Lorimer also designed the layout
of the gardens, with a walled garden to the north and terraces
falling away to the south.
In 1949 the Hill of Tarvit Mansion House was bequeathed to the
National Trust for Scotland who continue to welcome the public
to view this impressive art and antique collection. North East
Fife is mainly an agricultural area and the Fife Folk Museum at
CERES has an excellent collection of old farming implements, tools
and costumes which are a record of the way of life, in days gone
by. The Museum is located in the 17th century Weigh House and
adjacent cottages which stand beside the humped back stone bridge
that Archbishop James Sharp crossed on his last journey to Magus
Muir in 1679. The village green is an attractive setting for the
annual Highland Games which are the oldest free games in Scotland.
The memorial by the bridge commemorates the men of Ceres who marched
to Bannockburn to support Robert the Bruce in his battle with
King Edward's army in 1314.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
Return
to Scottish Castles
Return
to Fife
|
|